
The wheat farmer had given the package to an Episcopalian minister in his hometown, who then mailed it to a colleague in Boston, where it soon reached its target. One of hundreds of participants in an ambitious scientific experiment, he had been asked to try to convey the folder to Alice by giving it to someone in his social circle who might be more likely to know her, who then took up the same task. The wheat farmer had followed his instructions. “Alice,” said one of her instructors, approaching her and holding the same brown folder. Just four days later and hundreds of miles away, Alice was on a sidewalk in Cambridge when something surprising happened. Half a century ago, a wheat farmer in Kansas received in the mail a brown folder containing a set of instructions and the name of an assigned target: a Boston divinity school student named Alice. Psych 101 is an occasional series on classic psychology research and how it informs the way we understand ourselves today.
